Science World Report Got an Itch You Can't Scratch? Science May Have the Cure. Researchers at the National Institutes of Health identified the molecule that causes itching in a study of mice to find that the natriuretic polypeptide b (Nppb) molecule is released in the ... and more »
Science World Report Got an Itch You Can't Scratch? Science May Have the Cure. Researchers at the National Institutes of Health identified the molecule that causes itching in a study of mice to find that the natriuretic polypeptide b (Nppb) molecule is released in the ... and more »
Science World Report Got an Itch You Can't Scratch? Science May Have the Cure. Researchers at the National Institutes of Health identified the molecule that causes itching in a study of mice to find that the natriuretic polypeptide b (Nppb) molecule is released in the ... and more »
Science World Report Researchers at the National Institutes of Health identified the molecule that causes itching in a study of mice to find that the natriuretic polypeptide b (Nppb) molecule is released in the spinal cord and triggers a process that is then experienced in ...
Wired.co.uk The team suspected that the protein natriuretic polypeptide b (Nppb) might be involved, but to find out if only the subset nerves were releasing it they bred mice that could not produce the protein. These mice did not respond to itchy stimuli, but were ...
Deccan Herald The small molecule, called natriuretic polypeptide b (Nppb), streams ahead and selectively plugs into a specific nerve cell in the spinal cord, which sends the signal onward through the central nervous system. When Nppb or its nerve cell was removed ... and more »
Scientist Analyzing proteins expressed by TPRV1 cells in mice, researchers from the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research in Bethesda, Maryland, discovered that a protein called natriuretic polypeptide b (Nppb) was expressed only in a subset of ...